THE LATEST NEWS
Major League Fishing and FLW Unify as One Brand
TULSA, Okla. (Sept. 29, 2020) – To further elevate the sport of tournament bass fishing and align multiple circuits as one company, Major League Fishing (MLF) announced today its unification with Fishing League Worldwide (FLW) as one brand, transitioning all FLW brand assets to MLF.
The Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit, Toyota Series, Phoenix Bass Fishing League, Abu Garcia College Fishing and High School Fishing will all carry the MLF logo and continue the five-biggest-fish format. A new website that builds on the existing sites, streamlines tournament entry, provides cutting-edge gear and tactics advice, and better highlights participating anglers is set to be unveiled in early 2021.
“Merging the FLW brand under the Major League Fishing umbrella is the next logical step in our company’s evolution, which now includes a broader reach than any of us thought possible in our formative years,” MLF BIG5 Executive Vice President and General Manager Kathy Fennel said. “The key to our success lies not in a name, but in our unwavering focus on providing the best possible tournaments for anglers, fans, hosts and sponsors – our family. Uniting with MLF under a single brand makes the whole greater than the sum of the pieces. The letters may be different, but the people and the values will remain the same.”
The FLW organization now known as “Major League Fishing BIG5” began life as Operation Bass. Founded on the shores of Kentucky Lake in 1979 by Mike Whitaker, a teacher and football coach turned electronics salesman, Operation Bass grew from humble beginnings to become the world’s largest tournament-fishing organization with five circuits and more than 300 events in 11 countries offering $21 million in awards.
Operation Bass was purchased by Minneapolis businessman Irwin L. Jacobs in 1996 and renamed FLW Outdoors in 2001 to honor Forrest L. Wood and the principles he embodied. While those principles still guide the company, FLW became Fishing League Worldwide in 2014 to set the stage for international growth, which now includes bass tournaments in Canada, China, Italy, Mexico, Namibia, Korea, Portugal, South Africa, Spain and Zimbabwe.
Fishing League Worldwide was acquired by Major League Fishing in November 2019. The acquisition was the most significant brand merger in competitive bass fishing history, linking an innovative tour and original, award-winning programming featuring the top professional anglers in the world to the extensive grassroots organization that serves tens of thousands of competitive anglers from high school and college students to weekenders and tour pros.
“The unrivaled television audience paired with unmatched tournament activation, MLF Bass Fishing magazine, a combined social media following in excess of one million fans, the sport’s most comprehensive live on-the-water coverage, and two of the sport’s top websites united under a single brand was a natural progression as the two organizations combine,” said Don Rucks, MLF Executive Vice President and General Manager.
To delineate between the Major League Fishing format of catch-weigh-immediate release competition, the five-biggest-fish tournament circuits will operate as the Major League Fishing BIG5 and will capitalize on MLF’s incredible reach on Outdoor Channel, Sportsman Channel, World Fishing Network, Discovery, CBS and MyOutdoorTV (MOTV).
New logo art will be provided to business partners, sponsors and anglers. The company expects that the changeover to the new name, logo and website will be completed by Q1 of 2021.
About Major League Fishing
Founded in 2011, Major League Fishing (MLF) brings the high-intensity sport of competitive bass fishing into America’s living rooms on Outdoor Channel, Discovery, CBS, CBS Sports Network, World Fishing Network, Sportsman Channel, and on-demand on MyOutdoorTV (MOTV). According to Nielsen ratings, Major League Fishing remains the number one series on Outdoor Channel for five years and MLF premiered as the number one outdoor show in their time slot on Discovery in 2019.
In 2019 MLF acquired FLW, which expands their portfolio to include the world’s largest grassroots-fishing organization, including the strongest five-biggest-fish format professional bass fishing tour, the Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit, as well as the Toyota Series, Phoenix Bass Fishing League presented by T-H Marine, Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI, and High School Fishing presented by Favorite Fishing.
The post Major League Fishing and FLW Unify as One Brand appeared first on Bass365.com.
Sumrall and Zaldain say Guntersville is Atypically Tough
Caleb Sumrall and Chris Zaldain both rolled into Lake Guntersville’s famous Waterfront Grocery Boat Ramp at 6:20 a.m. Tuesday morning for the final day of practice at the Bassmaster Elite Series as though it was a coordinated effort.
In reality, it was just a coincidence, but to hear how similar their answers were to questions about what fans can expect from this famous fishery when competition begins Wednesday you would have thought they were reading from the exact same script.
Q: Give this world class fishery a letter grade now that you’ve had two full days of practice.
Sumrall: C-
Zaldain: C
Q: Those are Not very impressive grades, what’s making it so tough?
Sumrall: Man, it’s just this time of year in the Deep South, and the aquatic vegetation is set up in a manner this week that doesn’t make the holes in it easy to target.
Zaldain: The weather. It went from beach weather to Carhartt jacket weather in a matter of two days. The second major cold from of early fall just rolled in, and I think it’s got these fish spun out.
Q: What three lures will you lean on a lot?
Sumrall: Pitching a 1 to 1.5 ounce Texas rigged punch weight, a soft swimbait and a Chatterbait.
Zaldain: Pitching a 1 to 1.5 ounce Texas rigged punch weight, a fast moving topwater (grins), and a small MegaBass 110 +1 junior jerkbait.
Q: How much weight will you have to average each day to leave here with a Top 10 on Saturday afternoon?
Sumrall: 14.8 pounds per day.
Zaldain: I’ll say 14 pounds per day.
The post Sumrall and Zaldain say Guntersville is Atypically Tough appeared first on Bass365.com.
Arizona’s Au Wins Toyota Series Western Division Finale at Clear Lake
CLEARLAKE, Calif. (Sept. 27, 2020) – Pro Tai Au of Glendale, Arizona, crossed the stage with a five-bass limit Saturday with a five-bass limit weighing 26 pounds, 4 ounces, to vault to the top of the leaderboard and win the three-day Toyota Series at Clear Lake tournament in Clearlake, California. Au’s three-day total of 15 bass weighing 63-3 earned him the win by a 5-pound, 4-ounce margin and earned him the top payout of $24,635 in the third and final tournament of the 2020 Toyota Series Western Division.
Au also won the Western Division season opener on Lake Havasu in his home state back in March.
“I’m shocked that I won,” Au said on stage. “It’s also a little emotional for me because this might be my last Western Division event for a while. I’m planning to go back east and fish the Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit next year and make my dream a reality.”
“I just got a brand new boat and this week was the first time putting it in the water,” Au said. “I spent time breaking in the motor and getting my Lowrance units rigged up. On the third day of practice, I broke one off on a Neko Rig and then caught a 5-pounder in one area and that gave me the confidence to start there during the tournament.”
The area he found ended up being the winning area and he plied it for three straight days on the way to victory. Au described the area as a rounded point inside a pocket adjacent to a long flat. He fished in the mid-lake area and the spot had clean water and grass.
The first day, Au relied on a Neko-rigged 5-inch Yamamoto Senko in the watermelon red color on a size 1 Decoy hook. He ended the day with 17 pounds, 8 ounces and found himself in 13th place.
On the second day, Au returned to the same area. He caught one immediately, but the bite went cold after that.
“I knew they were still there because I could see them on my Lowrance units,” Au said. “They were just nipping at the Neko Rig and I knew I had to change it up to get them to react. I started throwing a Lucky Craft LV 500 in ghost minnow and chartreuse shad and figured out the cadence they wanted.”
Once he figured out how to fish the bait in his area, his catches went way up as he brought in 19-7 on the second day.
“The key was to rip it as hard as I could to get them to react,” he said. “I sat in one spot and made repeated casts to the same place. If you could get the school to fire up, you could catch four or five in a row.”
Saturday, he returned to his magic area and worked it all day long on his way to the win.
“I parked in that same spot for three straight days,” Au says. “It was a highway for fish coming in and out along the grass.”
He fished the lipless baits on two different setups, depending on the thickness of the grass. A 7-foot, 4-inch heavy Fitzgerald Bryan Thrift Signature Series cranking rod on the outside edges of the grass and a 7-foot, 6-inch medium-heavy Fitzgerald Stunner HD Series rod on the inside grass line. He fished both on Daiwa Tatula 100 reels spooled with 20-pound fluorocarbon.
The top 10 pros on Clear Lake finished:
1st: Tai Au of Glendale, Ariz., 15 bass, 63-3, $24,635
2nd: Tom White of Costa Mesa, Calif., 15 bass, 57-15, $9,613
3rd: Jared Linter of Arroyo Grande, Calif., 15 bass, 54-14, $7,390
4th: Justin Kerr of Simi Valley, Calif., 15 bass, 54-9, $6,159
5th: Todd Kline of San Clemente, Calif., 15 bass, 53-5, $5,543
6th: John Pearl of Upper Lake, Calif., 15 bass, 51-6, $4,927
7th: Sergio Arguello of North Hollywood, Calif., 15 bass, 50-6, $4,378
8th: Jordan Collom of Canyon Lake, Calif., 15 bass, 49-7, $3,695
9th: Wade Curtiss of Eagle, Idaho, 15 bass, 49-6, $4,079
10th: Phillip Dutra of Concord, Calif., 15 bass, 47-4, $2,463
A complete list of results can be found at FLWFishing.com.
Curtiss took home an extra $1,000 as the highest finishing FLW PHOENIX BONUS member. Boaters are eligible to win up to an extra $35,000 per event in each Toyota Series tournament if all requirements are met. More information on the FLW PHOENIX BONUS contingency program can be found at PhoenixBassBoats.com.
Blaine Christiansen of San Jose, California, won the Co-angler Division Saturday with a three-day total of 15 bass weighing 50 pounds, 1 ounce. Christiansen took home the top prize package of a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower outboard motor.
The top 10 co-anglers on Clear Lake finished:
1st: Blaine Christiansen of San Jose, Calif., 15 bass, 50-1, Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat w/115-hp outboard
2nd: Jeff Hodges of Grover Beach, Calif., 15 bass, 48-1, $3,209
3rd: Travis Avery of Mount Vernon, Wash., 15 bass, 46-11, $2,567
4th: Jack Farage of Discovery Bay, Calif., 15 bass, 45-10, $2,246
5th: Bruce Harris of Oakdale, Calif., 15 bass, 44-15, $1,926
6th: Jesse Parks of Avondale, Ariz., 15 bass, 42-2, $1,605
7th: Larry Rogers of Riverside, Calif., 15 bass, 40-2, $1,284
8th: Scott Bern of San Rafael, Calif., 15 bass, 39-12, $1,123
9th: Zack Eggleston of Goleta, Calif., 15 bass, 38-14, $963
10th: Ilya Guryanov of West Sacramento, Calif., 15 bass, 35-14, $847
The Toyota Series at Clear Lake was the third and final regular-season tournaments in 2020 for Western Division anglers. The next event for Toyota Series anglers will take place Oct. 1-3 – the Toyota Series at Lake Norman in Huntersville, North Carolina. For a complete schedule, visit FLWFishing.com.
The 2020 Toyota Series consists of eight divisions – Central, Eastern, Northern, Plains, Southeastern, Southern, Southwestern and Western – each holding three regular-season events, along with the International division. Anglers who fish all three qualifiers in any of the eight divisions and finish in the top 25 will qualify for the no-entry-fee Toyota Series Championship for a shot at winning $235,000 cash, including a $35,000 FLW PHOENIX Bonus for qualified anglers. The winning co-angler at the championship earns a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower outboard. The 2020 Toyota Series Championship will be held Dec. 3-5 on Lake Cumberland in Burnside, Kentucky, and is hosted by the Somerset Tourist & Convention Commission and the Burnside Tourism Commission.
For complete details and updated information visit FLWFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the Toyota Series on FLW’s social media outlets at Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube.
About FLW
FLW is the world’s largest tournament-fishing organization, providing anglers of all skill levels the opportunity to compete for millions in prize money across five tournament circuits. Headquartered in Benton, Kentucky, FLW and its partners conduct more than 290 bass-fishing tournaments annually around the world, including the United States, Canada, China, Italy, South Korea, Mexico, Namibia, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, and Zimbabwe.
FLW tournament fishing can be seen on the Emmy-nominated “FLW” television show while Bass Fishing magazine delivers cutting-edge tips from top pros. Acquired by Major League Fishing in late 2019, FLW is expanding its programming in 2020 to the Outdoor Channel and the Sportsman Channel as well as on-demand at MyOutdoorTV (MOTV).
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Joseph Opager | Director of Communications | FLW | Joseph.Opager@FLWFishing.com
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Walters’ Adjustment Seals Victory At Bassmaster Eastern Open On Hartwell
ANDERSON, S.C. — Making a key bait adjustment, Patrick Walters of Summerville, S.C., sacked up a Championship Friday limit of 13 pounds, 11 ounces and won the Basspro.com Bassmaster Eastern Open at Lake Hartwell with a three-day total of 44 pounds, 5 ounces.
In keeping with Hartwell tradition, the Bassmaster Elite Series pro spent a lot of time with a Zoom Super Fluke on Days 1 and 2. However, during Friday’s competition, he switched to a Fluke Stick — a 6 1/4-inch stickworm with a deeply forked tail like the Super Fluke.
“I had been throwing the Super Fluke in white pearl on 14-pound line on a baitcaster, but when I switched over to the Fluke Stick in natural shad on a spinning rod, it was lights-out after that,” Walters said. “A little bit of bait profile change showed out this week. It was like they had never seen it.
“No one else is throwing this bait; everyone else is throwing a Fluke. They’ve been throwing a Fluke on this lake for eight years, so the fish have seen it before and they know it’s the same action. The Fluke Stick is something that gets them fired up.”
Walters, who weighed 14-15 and 15-11 the first two days, said a blistering retrieve proved most effective. Hartwell is full of blueback herring, a fast-paced species of baitfish that typically roams open waters. Mimicking the herring’s frantic appearance was the key to tempting bites.
Also important was a highly mobile game plan. Walters spent most of his time on the lake’s lower end because he felt that region held bigger spotted bass and largemouth. Although the latter eluded him Friday, Walters weighed a big largemouth the first two days, including a 4-6 on Day 1.
He targeted a mix of cane piles and long, tapering points. He got his bites in 5 to 15 feet and spent very little time on spots that did not immediately produce.
“I put that trolling motor down 50 times a day,” Walters said. “I was catching 40 fish a day, and I just got blessed enough this week to thankfully take home the trophy.”
This is Walters’ third Bassmaster victory. He and fellow University of South Carolina angler Tyler All won the 2017 Carhartt Bassmaster College Series Southern Regional presented by Bass Pro Shops at Winyah Bay. Walters also won the 2018 Basspro.com Bassmaster Central Open on the Red River.
“I really didn’t know how this week was going to pan out,” Walters said. “You can’t predict it; you just have to go fishing every single day and fish as hard as you can.
“That Red River definitely solidified that I could do it. But to do it here in Anderson, S.C., on Lake Hartwell, I absolutely love this lake. This means the world to me.”
For his efforts, Walters earned $42,267.
Jayme Rampey of Liberty, S.C., finished second with 42-6. Starting the day in 12th place with a 4-6 deficit, Rampey turned in the best performance of the final round — a 16-2 limit. Adding this to his previous weights of 10-9 and 15-11, Rampey gave Walters his biggest scare and ended just 1-15 off the winning total.
Rampey targeted cane piles, timber and flats between the launch site of Green Pond Landing and Event Center and the Hartwell Dam and caught his fish on a Zoom Super Fluke in pearl white. Essential to his success was a 7-4 Abu Garcia Veracity rod, which allowed him to get a good hook set.
“I got the presentation down yesterday — what the bigger ones wanted,” Rampey said. “The first day, I thought they wanted it fast but I was catching little ones. The second day, I slowed it down and put a little pause in it, and the bigger ones really started biting yesterday. Today, it really materialized and kept going.”
Andy Wicker of Pomaria, S.C., finished third with 40-12. His daily weights were 15-11, 13-13 and 11-4.
“I caught most of my fish this week on a Berkley Cane Walker, and I think there’s a good reason they call it the Cane Walker —that thing catches them over cane piles,” Wicker said. “I also caught some fish on a Berkley Drift Walker and a Fluke.”
Day 1 leader, Cody Hahner of Wausau, Wis., won the $750 Phoenix Boats Big Bass award for his 6-3. Walters won the $500 Garmin Tournament Rewards prize.
Topping the co-angler division, Mark Grizzle of Cumming, Ga., turned in a three-fish limit of 10-1 — the only double-digit catch of his field — and finished with a winning total of 21-10. Weighing 4-6 and 7-3 the first two days, Grizzle won by a margin of 3-4.
Fishing a Sebile Magic Swimmer and a Heddon Zara Spook, Grizzle anchored his Day 3 limit with bookend 4-pounders — one spotted bass and one largemouth. He earned $18,927.
J.W. Smith of Goose Creek, S.C., won the $250 Phoenix Boats Big Bass prize among co-anglers for his 6-0.
Jason Christie of Park Hill, Okla., took the lead in the Falcon Rods Bassmaster Opens Angler of the Year standings with 735 points. Bryan New of Belmont, N.C., is in second with 704, followed by Scott Martin of Clewiston, Fla., with 652, Justin Atkins of Florence, Ala., with 642 and Marc Frazier of Newnan, Ga., with 638.
The tournament was hosted by Visit Anderson.
2020 Basspro.com Bassmaster Opens Series Title Sponsor: Basspro.com
2020 Basspro.com Bassmaster Opens Series Platinum Sponsor: Toyota
2020 Basspro.com Bassmaster Opens Series Premier Sponsors: Abu Garcia, Berkley, Humminbird, Mercury, Minn Kota, Nitro Boats, Power-Pole, Ranger Boats, Skeeter Boats, Talon, Yamaha
2020 Basspro.com Bassmaster Opens Series Supporting Sponsors: Bass Pro Shops, Carhartt, Huk Performance Fishing, Mossy Oak Fishing, Rapala
About B.A.S.S.
B.A.S.S. is the worldwide authority on bass fishing and keeper of the culture of the sport, providing cutting edge content on bass fishing whenever, wherever and however bass fishing fans want to use it. Headquartered in Birmingham, Ala., the 515,000-member organization’s fully integrated media platforms include the industry’s leading magazines (Bassmaster and B.A.S.S. Times), website (Bassmaster.com), television show (The Bassmasters on ESPN2 and The Pursuit Channel), radio show (Bassmaster Radio), social media programs and events. For more than 50 years, B.A.S.S. has been dedicated to access, conservation and youth fishing.
The Bassmaster Tournament Trail includes the most prestigious events at each level of competition, including the Bassmaster Elite Series, Basspro.com Bassmaster Opens Series, TNT Fireworks B.A.S.S. Nation Series, Carhartt Bassmaster College Series presented by Bass Pro Shops, Mossy Oak Fishing Bassmaster High School Series presented by Academy Sports + Outdoors, Bassmaster Team Championship, new Huk Bassmaster B.A.S.S. Nation Kayak Series powered by TourneyX presented by Abu Garcia and the ultimate celebration of competitive fishing, the Academy Sports + Outdoors Bassmaster Classic.
2020 Basspro.com Eastern Open at Lake Hartwell 9/23-9/25
Lake Hartwell, Anderson SC.
(BOATER) Standings Day 3
Angler Hometown No./lbs-oz Pts Total $$$
1. Patrick Walters Summerville, SC 15 44-05 200 $42,267.00
Day 1: 5 14-15 Day 2: 5 15-11 Day 3: 5 13-11
2. Jayme Rampey Liberty, SC 15 42-06 199 $20,287.00
Day 1: 5 10-09 Day 2: 5 15-11 Day 3: 5 16-02
3. Andy Wicker Pomaria, SC 15 40-12 198 $14,320.00
Day 1: 5 15-11 Day 2: 5 13-13 Day 3: 5 11-04
4. Bobby Stanfill Greenwood, SC 15 40-08 197 $11,933.00
Day 1: 5 16-08 Day 2: 5 11-08 Day 3: 5 12-08
5. Scott Martin Clewiston, FL 15 40-07 196 $10,382.00
Day 1: 5 15-12 Day 2: 5 10-09 Day 3: 5 14-02
6. Andrew Upshaw Tulsa, OK 15 40-04 195 $9,547.00
Day 1: 5 14-10 Day 2: 5 13-12 Day 3: 5 11-14
7. Jason Christie Park Hill, OK 15 39-08 194 $8,950.00
Day 1: 5 14-14 Day 2: 5 12-03 Day 3: 5 12-07
8. Derek Lehtonen Woodruff, SC 15 37-11 193 $8,353.00
Day 1: 5 14-15 Day 2: 5 12-01 Day 3: 5 10-11
9. Marc Frazier Newnan, GA 15 37-08 192 $6,563.00
Day 1: 5 14-13 Day 2: 5 13-00 Day 3: 5 09-11
10. Brandon Cobb Greenwood, SC 15 36-00 191 $5,370.00
Day 1: 5 13-14 Day 2: 5 12-09 Day 3: 5 09-09
11. Cody Hahner Wausau, WI 13 34-10 190 $5,523.00
Day 1: 5 20-04 Day 2: 3 06-00 Day 3: 5 08-06
12. John Maner Falkville, AL 12 34-01 189 $4,177.00
Day 1: 5 13-12 Day 2: 5 15-02 Day 3: 2 05-03
———————————————————————–
PHOENIX BOATS BIG BASS
Cody Hahner Wausau, WI 06-03 $750.00
———————————————————————–
Totals
Day #Limits #Fish Weight
1 128 768 1477-15
2 125 734 1359-13
3 11 57 135-08
———————————-
264 1559 2973-04
2020 Basspro.com Eastern Open at Lake Hartwell 9/23-9/25
Lake Hartwell, Anderson SC.
(NON_BOATER) Standings Day 3
Angler Hometown No./lbs-oz Pts Total $$$
1. Mark Grizzle Cumming, GA 9 21-10 200 $18,927.00
Day 1: 3 04-06 Day 2: 3 07-03 Day 3: 3 10-01
2. Neal Shade Greenville, SC 9 18-06 199 $4,453.00
Day 1: 3 06-09 Day 2: 3 04-07 Day 3: 3 07-06
3. Cody Wilson Ladson, SC 9 18-05 198 $3,340.00
Day 1: 3 06-03 Day 2: 3 07-03 Day 3: 3 04-15
4. Caz Anderson Hayesville, NC 9 17-12 197 $2,505.00
Day 1: 3 05-07 Day 2: 3 06-03 Day 3: 3 06-02
5. Darren Ashley Calhoun Falls, SC 9 17-10 196 $2,338.00
Day 1: 3 06-04 Day 2: 3 05-04 Day 3: 3 06-02
6. Nathan Mcclure Hiawassee, GA 9 15-11 195 $2,227.00
Day 1: 3 07-07 Day 2: 3 03-08 Day 3: 3 04-12
7. Mike Anderson Eustis, FL 8 15-09 194 $2,115.00
Day 1: 3 08-05 Day 2: 2 03-03 Day 3: 3 04-01
8. Ronald Young New Braunfels, TX 9 15-09 193 $2,004.00
Day 1: 3 06-07 Day 2: 3 04-05 Day 3: 3 04-13
9. Mitch Van Ert Watertown, WI 9 14-15 192 $1,837.00
Day 1: 3 06-03 Day 2: 3 04-07 Day 3: 3 04-05
10. Drew Pridgen Greenwood, SC 9 14-12 191 $1,670.00
Day 1: 3 04-07 Day 2: 3 06-02 Day 3: 3 04-03
11. Mitchell Grimsley Hiawassee, GA 7 14-07 190 $1,559.00
Day 1: 3 06-06 Day 2: 3 05-13 Day 3: 1 02-04
12. Andy Simm Piney Flats, TN 9 14-07 189 $1,447.00
Day 1: 3 05-09 Day 2: 3 05-04 Day 3: 3 03-10
———————————————————————–
PHOENIX BOATS BIG BASS
JW Smith Goose Creek, SC 06-00 $250.00
———————————————————————–
Totals
Day #Limits #Fish Weight
1 67 300 473-06
2 76 318 492-03
3 11 34 62-10
———————————-
154 652 1028-03
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Bass 365 LIVECAST #4 with Bassmaster Classic Champion HANK CHERRY
Bass 365 LIVECAST with 2020 Bassmaster Classic Champion, Elite series Pro Hank Cherry. Mike and Ricky sit down with the tournament champion and talk about everything bass fishing. From Winning $300,000 at the Bassmaster Classic, to Fall bass fishing tactics, new Berkley Baits, and what’s next for the Bassmaster Elite Series.
The post Bass 365 LIVECAST #4 with Bassmaster Classic Champion HANK CHERRY appeared first on Bass365.com.